Category Archives: Atheism

Questions and issues regarding atheism.

Official Report for the 11th of May Meeting.

We met, we dis­cussed, and two of us had some­thing to drink. The out­come of the equi­val­ent of a First Con­tact situ­ation between a group of people from the closest thing to a Malay­sian athe­ist soci­ety with a politi­cian was extraordin­ary in its pro­duct­ive­ness. Read our report at the fol­low­ing link. Kok Sen Wai has

wkwk

Big meet­ing tomor­row, as Sen Wai has covered quite flat­ter­ingly on his blog. I have little else to say except that I am look­ing for­ward to the next 24-hours.

All Atheists are Invited to Apply

to the fol­low­ing pro­gramme that me and a few of my com­rades at the Malay­sian Athe­ists Organ­isa­tion (self-titled) in the interest of bring­ing much needed under­stand­ing of who (or indeed what) athe­ists are. For the past two weeks, the enclave of athe­ist act­iv­ists have been dis­cuss­ing when to hold a meet­ing with a politi­cian who wishes

Death & Birth

It is with the utmost pleas­ure for me to present truth dressed as bull­shit and bull­shit lead­ing to res­ist­ance. First, the latest SMBC Theatre that makes fun of the­ists and the sin­gu­lar­ity while cel­eb­rat­ing geek cul­ture with Baroque strings play­ing over a sketch with three guys under­neath the shadow of a tree. Next, the launch of

Happy Darwin Day

The sec­u­lar move­ment has come a long way in Malay­sia within the past few years, with a great major­ity of the move­ment sup­por­ted by groups on the Inter­net. This Dar­win Day, cel­eb­rate the joys of free­dom of con­science, free­dom of dis­be­lief, and free­dom of thought by join­ing the fol­low­ing com­munit­ies of athe­ists in Malay­sia: Malay­sian

Infatuation

Is annoy­ing. It stuns the mind, encour­ages ration­al­ising, and achieves eco­nomic ruin with a hint of des­per­a­tion in encour­aging fur­ther acts of humi­li­ation and men­tal dis­ab­il­ity. Infatu­ation with Jesus pro­duces the exact effect. I had a rather trouble­some day today hav­ing wasted half of the day because of a mis­un­der­stand­ing in an inter­view I sched­uled

Gaysec Admit They Were Wrong.

Say­ing sorry is prob­ably one of the few things one can do once one has greatly wronged someone else. I am cer­tain of its inad­equacy when the great wrong was the attempt to des­troy the life of a human. Still, here’s the apo­logy in full, and the sali­ent parts below, roughly trans­lated: kami mengaku informasi